Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 7 November 1895 — Page 2
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AWFUL!
MISS VANDE
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Marries the Duke Nov. 6. Guess
she kas a right to. The Duke has
asaap. Now if anybody around
tjiese parts are about
TOBEM
And in consequence of not getting
more than a million dollars with
your wife, have to stretch your
money. The Star Clothing House
can help you out. With the ex
cellent suits, stylish, good-fitters,
at little prices. Here a dollar
seems to stretch. It goes further
and gets more. Every thing, for all
ages, from the grandfather, to the
boy
J. KMlfS, Prop,
22 W. Main St.
SECOND
Furniture, Stoves, Dishes, Glassware, Carpets, BabyCabs, Sewing Machines, Etc., Etc.,
F#rjSale"at the lowest living prices. Call and see my stock. I will pay highest prices for all kinds of secondhand goods.
T.'.r. OEE,
ProprietorjSecondjHand Store.
^West'Mam St. 7(5-tt
J. E. MACK,
TEACHEE OF
I' Viilifl, Piano, Cornet,
Kesldence, North Street, next to New ^Christian Church. d&w aug
C. A. BELL
Office 7 and 8 Dudding-Moore block, Greenfield, lad.
P/zutice limited to diseases of the
m, THROAT, EYE and EAR
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DR. J. M. LOCHKEAB, BOMEOPATHIC rHYSICIAN and SURGEON. Office and residence 42 N. Penn. street, west side, and 2nd door north of Walnut
Prompt attention to calls In city or •puntry. Speoial attention to Childrene, Womena' and Chronic Diseases. Late resident pbyflteian St. Louis Childrene Hospital.
Stoly
UTAH NEBRASKA KENTUCKY MARYLAND NEW JERSEY KANSAS MASSACHUSETTS NEW YORK IOWA OHIO PENNSYLVANIA
THE EVENING REPUBLICAN.
W. S. MOXTGOMEUY, Editor and Publisher.
Subscription Rates.
One week., 10 cents One year 85.00
Entered atPosfcoffice asseeond-class matter.
THE Democrats wanted Utah for a state. They voted her in and she will not do a thing for them sxsept sleet two Republican United States Senators.
THE Claude Matthew* democratic presidential boom is to be launched at a big banquet in Philadeldhia on the 20 inst. It will strike chilly waters, a roilgh see aid stormy times are ahead of the little iomlet.
FOR forty years and .more Kentucky went Democratic but the good old Henry Clay. Whig State has assumed her place under the Republican banner of protection and is en the right side.
VARIOUS theories are given for the Republican victory in Kentucky. Some say it was the earthquake, some the drouth, some the G. A. R. reunion, some that the trouble was cau9ei by one man getting bigger than his party, etc., etc., but oh my how the Republicans rejoice.
The Lecturer, Major H. O.Dane, Dies at Sea
Major H. Dane, who was one of the lecturers for the High School course this year, recently died on board a ship while enroute from Australia to this country and was buried at sea. He was coming home to fulfill his lecture engagements. Particulars of his death are not kuown. M^jor Dane was one of the most popular lecturers ever in Greenfield. Some other noted lecturer will be selected to take his place in the course.
A Hoosier On Top.
The Marion-Sims College of Medicine, of St. Lousis, Mo., which is shortly to become a University, each year offers free tuition and fees to the student making the highest grades in English Grammar, U. S. History, Algebra and English Literature. These examinations were open to all of the 364 students present, seniors, juniors and freshmen. As a result of the examinations this year, Ed Curry, son of Capt. I. A. Curry, of this city, took first honors and was given the free scholarship.
$100 lieward, SS100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75 cents.
For rent, two newly furnished rooms, centrally located. office. JS mMtMM 63tf
IT'S A BIG REPUBLICAN IANDSLIDE!
Mississippi and Virginia Left For the Democrats. The Republicans Made No Effort to Capture Them.
EEPUBLICAN PLXJU^LTTIES:
Hancock County's Big Corn.
Last week we were over the greater part of Hancock County and among others talked with a good many men who were gathering corn. The corn all over the county is very fine. Occasionally we saw a piece that would only make about 30 bushels per acre, but the greater number of fields would run from 50 to 60 bushels per acre. Many fields are making 75 bushels. Mr. Ed Jackson has a forty acre field on Jerome Black's big farm in the south-west part of this Tp,, that will make 85 bushels per acre. He gathered SO rows across the field that yielded 300 bushels.
Jacob N. Hoss who lives on the same farm also had some remarkable fine corn. He gathered a half acre that yielded 53 bushels or at the rate of 106 bushels per acre. He brought a number of ears into the REPUBLICAN office and a number of them had over 1,500 grains on them. That is big corn and no mistake. Irwin Barnard, of Green Tp., had a big field of corn in the Sugar Creek bottom on the farm of his father, Young Barnard, that was showing up 100 bushels per acre. It was the best piece of corn we saw. It was thick on the the ground and the ears were very large. Take it all in, Hancock County has fine corn this year.
Cliurcli Fair at McCordsvillo,
The ladies of the Uuiversalist Social Circle, at McCordsville, are arranging for a church fair in the form of the Festival of the Seasons at the Universalist Church on the 27th. and 28th. of this month which promises to be a pleasant affair.
There will be four booths to represent the four seasons of the year as follows, a Christmas booth to represent Winter, a Labor Day booth to represent Spring, a Fourth of July booth to represent Summer and a Thanksgiving booth for Autumn. Each booth will be decorated in a way particularly adapted to the season it represents and the articles for sale in each booth will be in harmony with the same, such articles consisting of carpets, comforts, quilts, wearing apparel, fancy articles etc.
The Fair will be open on the afternoon and evening of each dav and a supper each evening. On Wednesday evening an oyster and mush and milk supper and on Thursday evening a genuine Thanksgiving supper, consisting of turkey etc. The events of the eveniug will be interspersed with vocal and instrumental music. The general admission will be five cents and the price of supper on Wednesday evening will be fifteen cents for an oyster stew and five cents for mush and milk. On Thursday evening the supper will be twenty cents.
CHUJtCH NOTES. CHRISTIAN.
Preaching at 10:30 a. m. and
-r
7-M
».
^BUADLEY
189{
If
You Want
ROMANCE
p. ra.
by Eld. W. M. Gard, pastor. Morning theme, "The Victory of Faith." Evening, "Character Building." The evening sermon will be specially adapted to young people.
Peoples Party Meeting.
There will be a meeting of the People's Party at the court-house ia Greenfield, November 0th, to select delegates to the congressional convention .to be located hereafter. Let all who are interested in the reform movement be sure to attend. By order of County Central Committee. T. E. BENTLKY, Chm.
3,000
10,000 12,000 19,701 16,960 40,000 63,000 66,935 70,000 100,000 169,950
To'have your laundry done up in first-class shape, that is, washed clean and ironed glossy, the only place in town to have it done is at the Troy Steam Laundry. They have all the latest improved machinery, and will guarantee ail work they put out. If you try them once you will go again.
HERRING BROS.
Bob Gough, Solicitor.
ROMANCE!
THE MONTHLY MAGAZINE of COMPLETE STORIES.
ROMANCE is made for that multitude of peo4, pie who love stories in the good old sense of the word—not merely "studies in character," nor "stories with a purpose," nor "mosaics of style," but, first of all, stories that are good. tories, full of life and vigor and action—the sort of thing that arrests the reader's attention at the start and engrosses it to the end.
has printed stories by Robert Louis Stevenson, Mary E. Wilkin -, Rudyard Kipling, Alphonse Daudet, Frances Hodgson Burnet ,, A. Conan Doyle, Octave Thanet, Erckmann Chatrian, Moritz Jokai, Leo N. Tolstoi and a host of other famous writers of all lands. Ifc is edited by the well-known writer, Mrs. Kate Up3on Clark, and will publish during 1895 a series illustrating different varieties of the short story, which possess a distinctive charm.
ROMANCE
has brien reduced in price during the past year, aad is now the cheapest as well as the best story magazine in the world. Subscription pr^ce $1.00 a year. A sample copy will be sent for three two-cent stamps. ROMANCE PUBLISHING COMPANY.
Clintou Hall, Astor Place, New York.
I A N S
The modern standard Family Medicine Cures the common every-day ills of humanity.
1
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'•d
MAM
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The Banner of Light is, as every one knows,one.of themost successful denominational publications issued in this country.
In its 77th volume it is at once conservative and bright, discussing not only modern Spiritualism, but frequently landing its influence fearlessly in matters of public importance outside its principal field.
Mr. John W. Day, who is the editor and one of the proprietors, writes in The Banner of Light as follows to the proprietors of Paine's celery compound: "I owe you a debt of gratitude in placing OH the market such a nerve-easing and and soothing remedy as Paines' celery compound. It was brought to my notice by a friend who had himself been greatly relieved by its use, as I have also been. "I have frequently taken occasion to commend Paine's celery compound to others, and I do not know an instance wherein, if faithfully tried, it has not worked a beaef""Yours trulj John W. Day."
Th«
In publish
Vol
this fa
THE?' BANNER SOF'LIGHT.
Editor of a Great rPaper Cufed By Paine's Celery Compound..
OITS CuEEG.
EARLIEST INDIANS
SI
K-Atf
Mr. Day's portrait is given above. He is a member of the Masonic, Odd Fellows Grand Army and other fraternal organizations, and is highly tsteemed by his brethern and others in the social walks of life.
His gratitude for the good that this greatest of remedies has done him is in no sense remarkable. Thousands who have been made well
by
ot Mr. English's long-expect«d Historical work will eompleU In themselves, UNDER THE TITLE OP
CONQUEST of the NORTHWEST hes»
of the men who aehieved It, Including1 igT6i£ Clarke. By Hon. Wm. H. English,
larger Vftjl'umei, with numerous Illustrations.
SO£D PY SUBSCRIPTION....THREE STYLES O®" CtNPiKSjr,
FOR BALE.
13 acres choice land, within corporate limits of city,
JOHN CORCORAN
feM6 mol
Fame's celery
compound have sent their unsoclicitedtestimenials tothe proprietors of the remedy or direct to medical journals or newspapers telling for the benefit of others the results that followed the use of the remedy that i3 food for the nerves and, brain, that enriches the blood, that make the weak strong, and is the one nervefailing specific, prescribed by physicians and recommended by all who have ever faithfully used it, for insomnia, nervous debility, neuralgia, rheumatism, indigestion and the many ills that come from de. ranged, worn-out nerves and impure blood.
complete life of General
of Indiana. Complete In two
Hon. Wm. H. English, of Indianapolis, *s. certainly deserving of the highest commendation for his action in withdrawing om public life several years ago in order devote himself to the task of writing iv V* history of Indiana, the Introduction of wh:ch is now appearing In two volumes under the title of "CONQUEST OF THE
NORTHWEST. He Is a millionaire, •ti and it is therefor® unreasonable to suppose that his work along historical lines was animated by any spirit of Belflshneatf S
or
sordidn,ess. No other nian Is so well ifi: eouipjDcd tor the- task he self-imposed. pi' Ho has been a conspicuous fl&ifre in In- .:} diana almost continuously since It was ,adrrilfted to Statehood. He Was secretary ,s of the Constitutional Convention, and his personality Is strongly marked in the or•t iianic law as well as in much of subsequent legislation. His great wealth has afforded him opportunities for devoting
v.
his entire attention to literary labor. His intimacy with public men and State an'd Federal officials, has given him exceptional facilities for gaining access to doeu./i- ments .ncce.ssa.ry to insure thoroughness H: and exactness in the preparation of his A history. Alter several years of ardent devotton anAJabor,. undertaken In a spirit of- State pride and for pure love of it. th» publication of "THE CONQUH6T OF
THE NORTHWEST" will cause *him to be kindly remembered as an Indlanian whose motives have been often misconstrued. and whose real worth as a man and citizen has been often ignored by unreasonable political bias and human na* ture's inherent prejudice against men of Immense wealth.—Lafayette Courier.
C. W. MORRISON & SON,
UNDERTAKERS.
27 W. MAIN ST.
Greenfield, Indiana.
